Category Archives: Academics

Giving up the Grade

This article was printed in the spring 2007 issue of Our Schools / Our Selves and the CCPA Monitor, both published quarterly by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

By: David F. Noble

Critical pedagogy has long condemned grading as an impediment to genuine education, but critical pedagogues continue to grade, as a presumed condition of employment. “I hate it but I have to do it” is their lame lament.

But they no longer have to do it. Throughout the thirty-odd years of my university teaching career I have always found ways around grading, primarily by giving all A’s, thereby eliminating grades de facto if not de jure. Last year for the first time, after long bemoaning my “anomalous” practice, York University officials formally prevailed upon me henceforth to designate my courses “ungraded” (a pass/fail option without the fail), thereby taking them off the radar and perhaps unintentionally establishing a promising academic precedent.
As a tenured full professor, of course, I do enjoy an unusual degree of job security, a privilege provided by a paying public in need of some truth and thus some unshackled, socially responsible scholars. Moreover, as a unionized employee I am protected by a collective agreement which requires only that I submit evaluations on time without specifying what they “should” be. Thus I am indeed in a good position to challenge the grading regime, but so too are many others who continue to grade.

Why? Typically, as already indicated, colleagues express a fear of administrative reprisal. But they embrace grades also for other, unspoken, reasons, perhaps unacknowledged even to themselves.

Grades offer teachers a convenient device for allaying their anxieties about their own abilities by shifting them onto their students, through an endless round of tests, examinations and evaluations. Grades get teachers off the hook; they preserve professorial authority and are indifferent to professorial incompetence. Bad faith protestations about administration requirements can mask the fact that grades serve the teacher at the expense of the students, and at the sacrifice of education.

But in all this the primary reason for the existence of grades—publicly-subsidized pre-employment screening—is rarely acknowledged. Grades appear to be a matter between teacher and student—until they are “submitted.” At that point those for whom grades are really given—those who have perhaps never even stepped into a classroom—gain access to the measurements of their prospective labour force. Here is the silent third party in the halls of academia, the so-called elephant in the room, to whom academia has too long been hostage. Eliminating grades eliminates the elephant from the room, emancipates academia and reintroduces education.

The elimination of grades at a stroke shifts academic attention from evaluation to education, where it belongs. When skeptical colleagues protest that it is not fair for me to give the same grade both to people who work hard and to people who fail even to show up, I remind them that these people are not getting the same reward because the people who work hard also get an education. “Oh, yeah,” they say, remembering as an afterthought what should be at the forefront of their profession.

Students themselves have collectively never resisted my refusal to grade them, and our experiences have been mutually rewarding beyond measure, and all measurement. With grades no longer a matter of concern, no time is ever wasted on discussions about evaluation—heretofore students’ primary preoccupation. Without having to fear or defer to professors or peers, students are freed for forthright and authentic engagement, an essential ingredient of genuine education, and discover that they are not alone, despite the rituals of competitive individualism enforced everywhere else around them.

With the substitution of encouragement for evaluation, intellectual excitement becomes the defining element in the educational ethos, replacing anxiety–which, as every parent knows, is lethal to learning. Abandoning grades annuls alienation: students no longer depend on others for a sense of their own worth.

Without grades, students do not have to try to read the professor’s mind—an impossible task anyway, so philosophers tell us—and can instead concentrate upon reading their own minds, self-knowledge being the grail of education. With grades gone, and having thus side-stepped the institutionally routinized regime of infantilization so corrosive of self-respect, self-confidence and self-worth, students can now begin to take themselves and their own thoughts seriously—for too many an altogether novel experience. This is the only true end of education.

The elimination of grades is no longer merely a theoretical proposition. It is an actuality, and a precedent, given my experience at York University. I now teach officially-designated “ungraded” courses with the formal sanction of the Office of the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and in full recognition of the Vice President/Academic. From this fertile ground, I advise my colleagues across the country: Try it; you are bound to like it. And so, I suspect, are your students, who will at last start receiving what they have been presumably been paying for and what we have been professing to provide.

Historian David F. Noble is a professor at York University in Toronto.

Ontario: Colleges should be treated as legitimate partner to universities, retiring Humber College president says

Globe and Mail: Colleges should be treated as legitimate partner to universities, retiring Humber College president says

Robert Gordon has spent a career overseeing a massive expansion of Toronto’s Humber College both in reputation and size. Now on the eve of his retirement, he says it’s time for an overhaul of Ontario’s college system in order to shake its second-class image and become part of the solution to the country’s growing demand for postsecondary education.

Vancouver University Worldwide ordered to stop granting degrees

McLeans: Vancouver University Worldwide ordered to stop granting degrees

Raises questions about monitoring online universities

Last week’s B.C. Supreme Court ruling that ordered Vancouver University Worldwide to stop granting degrees in B.C. brings up an interesting question: where exactly is your university located? With the rise of distance education made possible by the Internet, you can take an array of classes from just about anywhere, from Nunavut to the Queen Charlotte Islands. While correspondence courses can be very convenient, the lack of physical campuses of some institutions is making it difficult to pin down just what jurisdiction a university is located in, and what laws apply.

Leading Advocate of Intelligent Design Is Denied Tenure at Iowa State U.

The Chronicle News Blog: Leading Advocate of Intelligent Design Is Denied Tenure at Iowa State U.

Iowa State University has denied tenure to Guillermo Gonzalez, an assistant professor of physics and astronomy who has been a prominent supporter of the idea of intelligent design. Mr. Gonzalez is appealing the university’s decision, according to an unusual news release issued by the university to explain its action. The release states that every level of review, from the departmental committee to the provost, determined that Mr. Gonzalez should not be awarded tenure.

In August 2005, 120 faculty members at Iowa State issued a statement denouncing intelligent design, in part as a reaction to Mr. Gonzalez’s work in the area. Intelligent-design advocates believe that some biological systems are so complex that they could have arisen only through the action of an intelligent force and not simply through Darwinian evolution, the theory of life that has overwhelming support from scientists.

The Discovery Institute, a leading backer of the intelligent-design movement, issued a news release on Monday that denounced the decision, saying that Mr. Gonzalez had written 68 peer-reviewed publications, far more than his department requires for tenure. But some comments on science blogs have questioned the worth of many of those publications and of Mr. Gonzalez’s scholarship in general. —Richard Monastersky

Academics Protest Education-Research Group’s Silence on ‘Social Justice’

The Chronicle: Academics Protest Education-Research Group’s Silence on ‘Social Justice’

In a heated discussion of anti-gay violence, social inequality, and the obligations of teacher-training programs, scholars attending the business meeting of the American Educational Research Association on Friday accused the organization of neglecting its commitment to the public good.

In a Charge of Plagiarism, an Echo of a Father’s Case

The New York Times: In a Charge of Plagiarism, an Echo of a Father’s Case

Jacqueline R. Griffith seemed to be flourishing as a tenured assistant professor in economics and finance at Kean University in New Jersey — that is, until another member of her department accused her of having plagiarized sizable portions of her doctoral dissertation.

Education group says Gallaudet University at risk of losing accreditation

San Diego Union-Tribune: Education group says Gallaudet University at risk of losing accreditation

The nation’s only liberal arts university for the deaf could lose its accreditation unless it addresses concerns about weak academic standards, ineffective governance and a lack of tolerance for diverse views, an education oversight group warned.

Gallaudet University was rocked by student demonstrations last fall that shut down the university for several days and forced the board to revoke the appointment of a new president.

Conservative Catholic Law School Founded by Pizza King to Move From Mich. to Fla.

The Chronicle News Blog: Conservative Catholic Law School Founded by Pizza King to Move From Mich. to Fla.

The Ave Maria School of Law announced this afternoon that it would move in 2009 from Ann Arbor, Mich., to the new town of Ave Maria, Fla., which is being built in former tomato fields in southwestern Florida between Naples and Immokalee. The law school was established in 1999 by Thomas S. Monaghan, the founder of Domino’s Pizza and a supporter of conservative Roman Catholic causes. The town of Ave Maria will also be home to Ave Maria University, also backed by Mr. Monaghan. Both institutions’ missions, like an Ave Maria College campus in Ypsilanti, Mich., that is now closing, are to provide an education in a conservative, Catholic intellectual tradition.

Bernard Dobranski, the law school’s president and dean, said in an interview that its Board of Governors had decided on the move after five years of discussing its options. He said Collier County, Fla., where the school will be located, is one of the nation’s fastest growing metropolitan areas, yet is without a law school. The school’s proximity to the university will create an intellectually stimulating milieu, he added. “Our presence there will be mutually beneficial to them and to us.” He said that although some faculty members have opposed the move, “everyone on the faculty and the staff is invited to come.”

Author of a Controversial Paper on the Medical Benefits of Prayer Is Accused of Plagiarizing

The Chronicle: Author of a Controversial Paper on the Medical Benefits of Prayer Is Accused of Plagiarizing

A controversial study that claimed to demonstrate the efficacy of prayer in medicine has suffered yet another blow to its credibility, as one of its authors now stands accused of plagiarism in another published paper.

Harvard proposes new focus

Los Angeles Times: Harvard proposes new focus

Harvard University proposed a curriculum overhaul Wednesday to emphasize sciences, religious beliefs and world cultures.

Is this the end of the scholarly journal?

Christian Science Monitor: Is this the end of the scholarly journal?

Publishing research to blogs and e-books is so easy, some are wondering if peer-reviewed journals are on their way to obsolescence.

The New Campus Dissidents

The Wall Street Journal: The New Campus Dissidents

Conservatives try to add classics to the curriculum.

BY KATHERINE MANGU-WARD
Friday, January 19, 2007 12:01 a.m. EST

“Higher education has failed democracy and impoverished the souls of today’s students,” declared Allan Bloom in “The Closing of the American Mind,” a book that chastised a generation of academics and students with its biting, furious analysis about the decline of American liberal education. Twenty years ago, at the time of the book’s publication, things looked bleak for those who shared Bloom’s qualms about the effects of relativism on the academy.

Recently, Bloom’s heirs have been hammering on the closed door, trying to reopen the American mind a bit. Their latest door-opening move has been an effort to create scholarly centers on campuses around the country: These centers would be devoted to the great books of Western civilization and the study of the American Founding, and they would be conducted in a rigorous, pre-1960s classroom style. Is there a chance of success?

A Wikipedia for Scholars (Take 2)

The Chronicle: A Wikipedia for Scholars (Take 2)

If imitation really is the sincerest form of flattery, then Wikipedia’s Jimmy Wales must be feeling pretty pleased with the new crop of upstart online encyclopedias coming from the academic world.

First came Larry Sanger’s Citizendium — a “progressive fork” of Wikipedia that aims to take articles from that site and let scholars mold them as they see fit (The Chronicle, October 27, 2006). And now there’s Scholarpedia, which combines Wikipedia’s open-source principles with a healthy dash of peer review.

ROTC and the Catholic Campus

Armed Forces & Society: “ROTC and the Catholic Campus”

Arguments that the military training program imposes conditions that are inconsistent with Roman Catholic teachings are based on “incomplete” and “incorrect” interpretations of those teachings, a professor of political science writes.

Free Expression Often Stifled

Free Expression Often Stifled: Scholars seem reluctant to discuss certain subjects for fear of being labelled ‘culturally insensitive’

Douglas Todd
Vancouver Sun

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

There were two things I couldn’t help noticing last January when I began my eight-month fellowship as a “visiting scholar” at Simon Fraser University campus.

One: In winter the mountaintop university in Burnaby seems perpetually smothered in a sea of clouds.

Two: “Visible minorities” are actually the majority on campus — by a long shot. East Asians and South Asians appear to account for more than two out of three students.

What did these two realities, the weather and ethnicity, have in common at SFU?

Virtually no one was willing to talk about either.

At least publicly.

I can understand why the people of SFU would not bother discussing the hilltop campus’s foggy winter micro-climate. Why obsess about the depressing way January’s grey fog mirrors Arthur Erickson’s grey concrete architecture — when everyone knows spring always brings the Burnaby campus to life in all its green, awe-inspiring glory?

But why were so many people unwilling to discuss the quiet ethnic revolution that’s taken place on this B.C. campus and others? What’s the significance of non-white students growing in proportions on campuses that far outweigh their demographic strength among the Greater Vancouver population?

There’s nothing necessarily wrong with a preponderance of East Asian and South Asians among SFU’s roughly 25,000 students, who will be the leaders of tomorrow. But only a few brave souls were even willing to question, sotto voce, what it means for the future of Canadian society.

I raise this issue only as an example of some of the subjects it seems scholars today are reluctant to discuss for fear of a student or colleague reporting them for being “culturally insensitive” or, of course the ultimate epithet, “racist” — both of which in academia can be your career’s kiss of death.

I’ve had the pleasure of staying in contact with academia through friends and my work at The Vancouver Sun, so I know that the issues and trends I experienced during my months at SFU generally reflects reality at the University of B.C. and many of the country’s roughly 100 universities and many more colleges, which currently enrol more than a million students.

CLIMBING DOWN FROM THE PROVERBIAL IVORY TOWER

This three-day series on the state of academia in North America is anything but a slam of SFU or other Canadian post-secondary institutions.

My eight months on SFU’s campus as the first Jack and Doris Shadbolt Fellow in the Humanities were fascinating and fabulous, one of the best things that’s ever happened to me.

The Jack and Doris Shadbolt Fellowship was brought into being by SFU’s dynamic dean of arts and social sciences, John Pierce, and others to make it possible for more SFU scholars to engage with non-academics such as myself.

While many journalists are cynical about academics, I revelled in their company as I taught, gave public lectures, moderated panels, wrote, read, participated in conferences and meetings, enjoyed fascinating lunches and organized my own symposium on spirituality and values in the Pacific Northwest.

Not only are academics highly intelligent, the ones I have to come to know are gracious, good listeners. Many are teaching important subjects. To put it simply, I like and respect them, and believe their students are fortunate to be in their classes. Academia, despite its challenges, is still a wonderful, mind-stretching place to be.

The Shadbolt Fellowship is one of many projects SFU is implementing in an effort to climb down from the proverbial ivory tower, to keep itself at the forefront of Canadian universities that are trying to engage the so-called real world.

In addition to such appointments, SFU was the first university to create a vibrant downtown Vancouver campus. Now it has a new Surrey campus, the Wosk Centre for Dialogue, a far-reaching continuing education department and numerous other outreach programs.

In the third section of this series, I will outline more of the strengths of SFU and other universities. But today, without wanting to seem like an ungrateful SFU guest, it’s necessary off the top to raise the issue of possible self-censorship on campus.

I do so because I’m one of those idealists who has higher expectations of universities (and colleges) than almost any other of the western world’s governmental and corporate institutions, many of which struggle much more than post-secondary institutions with free-expression restrictions and contributing to the public good.

But I believe if academic freedom — and academic relevancy — are not absolutely robust on Canada’s universities and colleges, we are all in trouble, perhaps particularly in B.C., which has the most highly educated population in the country.

In this series, I will in many ways be passing on the laments many scholars, staff and students at SFU, UBC, the University of Victoria and elsewhere have expressed to me in private. They include concern that:

– There is too much reluctance on campuses to frankly discuss issues of “identity politics.”

Ethnicity, as mentioned, is still too explosive to touch for most. Issues around gender are also mostly avoided, unless it is to champion women’s rights. I wondered if the restraint on thoroughly exploring these identity-group issues came out of an overweening desire to be fair to these groups, which were once minorities on campus, but are no longer. Tough topics surrounding aboriginals, who do remain under-represented on campus, are also largely evaded.

– Religion is still a difficult subject on secular campuses.

Quite a few scholars and staff at secular campuses have come to me and said they fear being exposed to other academics as religiously active. Many did not want to admit they were Lutheran, Catholic, “New Age” or evangelical Christian. And woe unto the nervous scholar at SFU who I heard was Mormon. Apparently he lived in fear of being outed. There are, however, tentative signs of more openness to religion.

– There seemed to be nervousness in secular higher education about discussing one’s values.

It’s hard for scholars to air the ethical convictions they actually hold on the issues of the day — because that could be construed as being “unobjective,” and possibly as moral indoctrination of students. Some academics adamantly believe they should teach in a “value-free” way. They oppose the idea of frankly expressing their own values with students. Others quietly wrestle with the reality that we all have biases and maybe it’s more fruitful to be open about them.

– There is not much dialogue over ultimate questions.

In academia, explorations of subjects such as truth, goodness and beauty are often slim to non-existent. I wonder if young, searching students can’t talk about these issues of meaning on a campus, where will they get the chance to talk about them in a concerted way? No wonder some students are drawn to private religious institutions.

This is not to say that these big subject areas — of ethnicity, gender, religion, values and meaning — don’t sometimes get discussed on campus, especially outside lecture rooms. They’re quietly mentioned among trusted friends in offices, hallways and less formal moments.

As well, in my time at SFU, I was fortunate to be placed under the auspices of the Institute for the Humanities, which has funding from the Simons Foundation to engage wider society on social issues, as well as the related humanities department. Members of SFU’s education department, where I also spent time, had a similar mindset about finding appropriate ways to serve as agents of social change.

Since one purpose of the Shadbolt Fellowship — funded by a legacy from Jack Shadbolt, one of B.C.’s most dynamic painters, and his wife, Doris, a leading culture analyst — is to bring non-academic writers and artists into the university to stimulate creative interchange, consider this series my effort to build more fruitful connections between our large, influential universities and those of us struggling to understand and make a small difference in the “real world.”

DARING ACADEMICS TO BE MORE PUBLIC INTELLECTUALS

In my first public talk at SFU, I encouraged academics to stop worrying about what their colleagues might think about them and to dare to become public intellectuals — to share their vast knowledge with the world.

I urged a group of scholars who gathered over sandwiches and coffee to get over their nervousness and work with journalists to spread their expertise through the mass media to hundreds of thousands of people, rather than restricting it to a few dozen students in their class or a handful of specialists reading obscure journals.

I referred to a controversial package I wrote a few years ago in The Vancouver Sun that ranked B.C.’s top 50 public intellectuals. The list included, from SFU, economist Richard Lipsey, Philosophers’ Cafe founder Yosef Wosk, ethicist Mark Wexler, community planner Mark Roseland, and, from UBC, medical economist Robert Evans, historian Jean Barman and ecologist Bill Rees.

Thinkers on this list, and many more who could have been on it, show courage to engage the wider world. They’re prepared to test their insights in the marketplace of ideas, where merely “interesting” thoughts are also expected to be “important.”

Public intellectuals are willing to deal with harried, deadline-pressured journalists desperate for a quick quote to meet a 5 p.m. deadline.

More bravely, they’re also prepared to expose themselves to most academics’ biggest fear: the censure of other scholars. I’ve heard academics dismiss such public thinkers as “grandstanders” and “egocentrics” and other unpleasant things.

Since I am one of those rare journalistic creatures who write about ethics for the mainstream media, I also seized the opportunity to challenge the group of scholars to heed the pleas that a philosopher, Rutgers University’s Bruce Wilshire, set down in his ground-breaking book, The Moral Collapse of the University: Professionalism, Purity and Alienation.

Wilshire argues the university has been disintegrating since the 1930s by succumbing to cold rationalism, professional specialization and careerism. He maintains that, while it’s still possible for students to jump through enough hoops to get a technique-based job in engineering, law, medicine, education or computer science, most students have almost no opportunity to ask questions about goodness or beauty or (that difficult concept) truth.

Wilshire says the more prestigious a university becomes, the greater emphasis its professors place on arcane, isolated pursuits. He argues an academic’s teaching ability — the art of expressing warmth, of listening and of stimulating creative thinking — make up just a tiny percentage of the criteria for advancement. Almost all of it is based on the quantity, not necessarily even the quality, of what they’ve published in often-obscure journals.

PEERS MAY TAKE EXCEPTION TO UNPOPULAR STATEMENTS

After my talk, a buzz ensued. Many scholars said later they’re deeply worried academics have been cowed by the tenure-approval process.

They’re anxiously aware tenure decisions are made largely by peers who may take exception to unpopular statements, or even jokes one makes about, you name it — politics, women, multiculturalism, religion, personal morality, politics or economic theory — all of which may lead to an academic being pigeon-holed in a way that could damage his or her career.

Several professors sadly said the system works against them becoming public intellectuals. Faculty tenure committees (which are made up of peers, not administrators) are not supposed to judge scholars’ and researchers’ abilities only on their publications, but to put significant weight on their teaching and public service (which includes being a public intellectual).

But I’ve been constantly told the unfortunate academic reality (for academics, students and the public) is that virtually all of one’s academic worth is based on one’s research and publications, often in obscure journals. Publish or perish is not an empty cliche. It’s virtually the law in academia. And it’s crushing many hard-working, devoted, up-and-coming scholars.

In the increasingly lengthy period before a budding academic can crawl up the ladder and grab the secure ring of academic tenure, most academics said it’s often a disadvantage to devote more time than one has to to teaching — and it’s especially dangerous to air one’s voice through the mass media.

Not only might a scholar’s comments be taken out of context by a reporter, they will invariably be condensed or simplified. What’s far worse, the scholar runs the danger of being seen by colleagues as crudely self-promoting. It’s a self-serving slur, justifying the non-engaged academic’s passivity.

To say paranoia about educating the public through the mass media runs deep in academia is an understatement, especially among young, untenured, low-paid and justifiably anxious sessional instructors.

It is the more mature scholars, who have earned tenure or have at least been around the block a few times, who finally conclude they no longer give a damn about colleagues’ backbiting or public timidity.

They’re determined to serve the larger society. They’re going to express their knowledge and insight through the mass media and other means. Whether one agrees with their views or not, they deserve kudos for engaging the rough-and-tumble world.

dtodd@png.canwest.com

STATE OF ACADEMIA

Today

Connecting academia with the wider world

Wednesday, Jan. 10

Raising controversial issues in academia

Thursday, Jan. 11

What Universities are Doing Right and How they can do more of it.
© The Vancouver Sun 2007

Copyright © 2007 CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest MediaWorks Publications, Inc.. All rights reserved.

Plagiarism: Everybody Into the Pool

The New York Times: Plagiarism: Everybody Into the Pool

THE club of people accused of plagiarism gets ever larger. High-profile members include Stephen Ambrose, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Kaavya Viswanathan — of chick-lit notoriety — and now even Ian McEwan, whose best-selling novel “Atonement” has recently been discovered to harbor passages from a World War II memoir by Lucilla Andrews. Plagiarism is apparently so rife these days that it would be extremely satisfying to discover that “The Little Book of Plagiarism,” by Richard A. Posner, has itself been plagiarized.

24 Bowl Teams Fail to Meet NCAA’s Academic Standards, Report Says

The Chronicle: 24 Bowl Teams Fail to Meet NCAA’s Academic Standards, Report Says

More than a third of the 64 college football teams headed to bowl games this season have failed to meet academic standards set by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, according to an annual report released on Monday by the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport at the University of Central Florida.

A&M could offer graduate degrees in homeland securit

Austin American-Statesman: A&M could offer graduate degrees in homeland securit

The program would build on existing interdisciplinary offerings in areas such as food safety, public policy, emergency response, urban planning and transportation safety.

Eschewing obfuscation: Business schools, firms target bad writing

Post-Gazette: Eschewing obfuscation: Business schools, firms target bad writing

Like a dark and stormy night, bad writing has long shadowed the business world — from bureaucratese to mangled memos to the cliche-thick murk of “corporatespeak.”

But in an era of nonstop e-mail and instant and text messaging, written communication skills within companies may be getting even worse as quality is compromised by the perceived need for speed.

Cheating on an Ethics Test? It’s ‘Topic A’ at Columbia

The New York Times: Cheating on an Ethics Test? It’s ‘Topic A’ at Columbia

Cheating is not unheard of on university campuses. But cheating on an open-book, take-home exam in a pass-fail course seems odd, and all the more so in a course about ethics.

Yet Columbia’s Graduate School of Journalism is looking into whether students may have cheated on the final exam in just such a course, “Critical Issues in Journalism.” According to the school’s Web site, the course “explores the social role of journalism and the journalist from legal, historical, ethical, and economic perspectives,” with a focus on ethics.